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Show S. L. Girls Win Homemaker Honors The following were named the 1959 Betty Crocker Homemak-ers Homemak-ers of Tomorrow in high schools in Salt Lake City: Katherine L. Dewitz, East high school; Joan M. McKenzie, of Granite high school; Julie Lar-sen, Lar-sen, Highland high school; Barbara Bar-bara L. Hooker, Judge Memorial high school; Linda L. Lehner, Olympus high school; Carole M. Hartoch, St. Mary of the Wasatch Wa-satch Academy; Joan C. Gardner of South high school and Carole M. Williams, West high school. Each received the highest score in a 50 minute written examination examina-tion on homemaking knowledge and attitudes taken by graduating graduat-ing senior girls in the school. Each will receive a homemaking pin manufactured by Josten's, which represents the slogan, "Home is Where the Heart Is." Her examination paper will be entered in competition with those of other school winners in the state to name the state Betty Crocker Homemaker of Tomorrow. Tomor-row. The test is designed and also judged by Science Research Associates. As-sociates. Each state Homemaker of Tomorrow To-morrow will receive a $1,500 scholarship from General Mills, an educational trip April 4-10 with her school advisor to Washington, Wash-ington, D.C., colonial Williamsburg, Williams-burg, Va., New York City and Minneapolis, and she will be a candidate for the title of Ail-American Ail-American Homemaker of Tomorrow. To-morrow. The school of each state winner will receive a set of the Encyclopedia Britannica. General Gen-eral Mills will award a $5000 scholarship to each state runner run-ner up. There are 12,260 participating schools in the nation which have enrolled 349,150 senior girls, the largest number of participants in the five year history of this $106,000 scholarship program. Growth has been steady since 1955 when 187,463 girls in 8040 schols participated. |